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IBM Research

IBM Research

Research Services

Yorktown Heights, New York 98,351 followers

Inventing what's next in science and technology.

About us

IBM Research is a group of researchers, scientists, technologists, designers, and thinkers inventing what’s next in computing. We’re relentlessly curious about all the ways that computing can change the world. We’re obsessed with advancing the state of the art in AI and hybrid cloud, and quantum computing. We’re discovering the new materials for the next generation of computer chips; we’re building bias-free AI that can take the burden out of business decisions; we’re designing a hybrid-cloud platform that essentially operates as the world’s computer. We’re moving quantum computing from a theoretical concept to machines that will redefine industries. The problems the world is facing today require us to work faster than ever before. We want to catalyze scientific progress by scaling the technologies we’re working on and deploying them with partners across every industry and field of study. Our goal is to be the engine of change for IBM, our partners, and the world at large.

Website
http://www.research.ibm.com/
Industry
Research Services
Company size
10,001+ employees
Headquarters
Yorktown Heights, New York

Updates

  • We’re seeing a move toward AI becoming more usable, more accountable, and more enterprise-ready. ⚡️ New ways of thinking about AI are emerging as we see how it’s being designed through the collaboration between IBM Research and ETH Zurich, how it’s being documented through the idea of an AI bill of materials, and how it’s being applied to complex, real-world data with Granite time series models. Get into the full breakdown in this week’s Circuit Breaker ↓

  • IBM 🤝 ETH Zürich. See what’s ahead as part of this 10-year collaboration redefining how algorithms power AI and quantum. 👇 🔹 New methods for solving problems in optimization and differential equations. 🔹 Innovations in linear algebra and Hamiltonian simulations. 🔹 New algorithmic foundations for breakthroughs across AI and quantum computing. Hear what the Director of IBM Research Zurich Alessandro Curioni has to say about the collaboration and what lies ahead: https://ibm.co/6048Eyx7u

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  • IBM Research reposted this

    🚀 Excited to share that Granite 4.0 3B Vision is now live! A compact vision-language model built for enterprise document understanding, with a focus on what actually matters in production: extracting structured data from complex visual documents — tables, charts, and key-value pairs. Despite its size, it delivers excelent performance across extraction tasks. 💡 What we’re particularly excited about: * Modular by design - Delivered as a LoRA adapter on top of Granite 4.0 Micro, enabling a single deployment to handle both multimodal and text-only workloads seamlessly. * Deep visual reasoning - A DeepStack-style architecture that injects both high-level semantics and fine-grained spatial details — critical when layout matters as much as content. * ChartNet dataset - A million-scale dataset for chart understanding, enabling the model to move beyond description to true structured reasoning. 🧩 Where it fits Designed to plug directly into real pipelines — either as a standalone extraction model or as part of a full document understanding stack with #Docling . Think: invoices, reports, forms, scientific documents — turning messy visuals into structured, usable data. Huge credit to the team at #IBMResearch (#IBMResearchIsrael and our collaborators at MIT-IBM). Rogerio Feris, Artem Spector, Avihu Dekel, Ben Wiesel, Dhiraj Joshi, Hang H., Isaac Sanchez, Jovana Kondić, Moshe Kimhi, Nimrod Shabtay, Pengyuan Li, Roei Herzig, Shafiq Abedin, Shaked Perek, Sivan Harary, Madison Lee, Abraham Daniels, Kate Soule, Udi Barzelay, Peter W. J. Staar, Aya Soffer, Shila Ofek-Koifman, Tal Drory, Luis Lastras, David Cox 👉 Available now on Hugging Face (Apache 2.0). Would love to see what you build with it. https://lnkd.in/dyswimUe #AI #MultimodalAI #VisionLanguageModels #DocumentAI #IBM

  • This week felt like a turning point 🚀 Quantum simulations are aligning with real lab data, AI is capturing patient notes even in noisy mid‑flight conditions, momentum is building around standardizing how we scale LLMs, and a clear takeaway from All Things AI is emerging: smaller models are having a moment and orchestration is quickly becoming the name of the game. Catch up on everything in this week’s Circuit Breaker ↓

  • Standard AI models struggle in loud, real-world environments. IBM Granite Speech thrives in them. Tested on medical flights with Australia’s Royal Flying Doctor Service, the model accurately transcribed clinical notes over heavy engine noise without any noise-canceling technology. The 2B Granite-Speech model even ran effortlessly on standard local hardware, outperforming major competitors in a truly challenging acoustic space. Discover how Granite is helping transform medical care in the skies: https://ibm.co/6047Ey3rz

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  • In two different quantum-safe collaborations, IBM is working with secure messaging apps Signal and Threema to explore how their services can remain protected in a future with powerful quantum computers. Across these research projects, teams are designing cryptographic protocols to withstand future quantum risks, applying existing post-quantum cryptography standards and rethinking how messaging systems protect conversations, group membership, and other sensitive metadata. Learn how these collaborations are shaping the future of quantum-safe messaging: https://ibm.co/6049EHoQf

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  • IBM Research reposted this

    I’m thrilled to congratulate Charles H. Bennett on being named a recipient of the 2025 ACM A.M. Turing Award, computing’s highest honor: https://lnkd.in/gpWpnQpD Charlie’s pioneering work, alongside Gilles Brassard, laid the scientific foundations of quantum information science and shaped the way the world understands computation and information itself. His visionary ideas sparked entire fields and continue to guide the work we do at IBM today. This year’s award is especially meaningful: it marks the first time the Turing Award has recognized achievements in quantum information science. Charlie’s five decades of groundbreaking contributions helped transform quantum mechanics from theory into one of the most important technological frontiers of our time. Personally, one of the moments that set me on this path was reading “Teleporting an unknown quantum state via dual classical and Einstein–Podolsky–Rosen channels” (https://lnkd.in/gUT-iRQP) during my undergraduate studies. That paper fundamentally changed how I thought about information and physics, and ultimately inspired me to dedicate my research to quantum information science. It is a powerful reminder of how deeply Charlie’s work has influenced not just a field, but generations of researchers. All of us at IBM are proud to celebrate Charlie’s extraordinary impact and lasting legacy.

    Congratulations to Charles H. Bennett and Gilles Brassard on receiving the 2025 ACM A.M. Turing Award! They are recognized for their essential role in establishing the foundations of quantum information science and transforming secure communication and computing. Bennett, an American physicist at IBM Research, and Brassard, a Canadian computer scientist at the Université de Montréal, have collaborated over four decades incorporating quantum principles into computational models. “Bennett and Brassard fundamentally changed our understanding of information itself,” said Yannis Ioannidis, President of ACM. “Their insights expanded the boundaries of computing and set in motion decades of discovery across disciplines.” Please join us in applauding their pioneering work! Learn more about the significance of their contributions here: https://lnkd.in/eWEPuwF2 IBM Quantum #ACMTuringAward #computing #pioneers

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  • IBM Research reposted this

    View organization page for IBM Quantum

    101,630 followers

    Congratulations to IBM Fellow and quantum pioneer Charles H. Bennett on being named a co‑recipient of the 2025 ACM A.M. Turing Award by the ACM, Association for Computing Machinery—the seventh IBM‑affiliated researcher to receive this honor, and the first recognized for contributions to quantum information science: https://lnkd.in/eDmrZrM2 Sharing the award with longtime collaborator Gilles Brassard of the Université de Montréal, the citation recognizes their foundational work that helped ignite the “quantum revolution,” advance the field of quantum information science, and reshape how researchers understand computation, communication, and the nature of information itself. Across more than five decades at IBM Research, Bennett explored the deep connections between computation and the laws of physics, pioneering ways to harness quantum behavior at the smallest scales to process and transmit information in ways classical computers cannot. His work on logical reversibility of computation (1973), quantum cryptography (BB84, the first quantum key distribution protocol, 1984), quantum teleportation (1993), and entanglement distillation (1996) helped lay the scientific foundation for concepts that shaped and continue to enable the progress of quantum computing today. You can still find Bennett at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, New York. When reflecting on the years in which he achieved the above breakthroughs, he said: “IBM was an ideal place to do this kind of research because you had people working on the fundamental physics of computing and hardware, and in the same building, people focused on the mathematics of computing. I could wander down the hall and talk to many people about fundamental ideas and in fields that, at that time, scarcely overlapped,” said Bennett. “That environment made it possible to grow the field of quantum information science into what it is today.”

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